Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Pacifica Is a Grassroots Radio Lifeline: Let’s Keep It Together
Ann Garrison, BAR contributor
20 Mar 2019
🖨️ Print Article
Pacifica Is a Grassroots Radio Lifeline: Let’s Keep It Together
Pacifica Is a Grassroots Radio Lifeline: Let’s Keep It Together

In many urban areas, Pacifica and its affiliates offer the only counter to the Republican/Democratic duopoly narratives.

“Flashpoints and Hard Knock Radio challenge the Democrats’ commitment to war, austerity, and globalization.”

The Pacifica Radio Network is a lifeline to grassroots stations across the US, including those in the Deep South with substantial Black audiences. Some people want to pull it apart and let each station go its own way, but the network should be kept together because it’s one of the few institutions that sustains a coast-to-coast anti-war, antiracist, and environmental justice community. Black Agenda Radio should upload its programming to the Pacifica Radio Audioport so that it can be downloaded for play on stations in Flint, Michigan; Athens, Georgia; Bisbee, Arizona; College Station, Texas; Carrboro, North Carolina; Immokalee, Florida and in larger cities that include Atlanta, Richmond, Lexington, and Nashville.

Countering the Sinclair Media Group narrative

In many of these cities and regions, grassroots radio stations are the only broadcast counter to the Sinclair Broadcasting Group’s warmongering, racist, and anti-environmentalist invective. Many of these grassroots stations are affiliates of the Pacifica Radio Network, which includes not only five major metropolitan stations—in Berkeley/San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles, Houston, New York City, and Washington, DC—but also 200 affiliates, most of which are much smaller and operating on the barest of budgets, with the exception of KBOO-Portland, KGNU-Boulder, and WMNF-Tampa.

Pundits often point to Wisconsin, one of the perennial swing states, as though it were the lone battleground that turned the 2016 presidential election for Trump, even though the state has only 10 electoral votes and Trump won by 77 (304 to 227). New Hampshire, Virginia, Colorado, and Minnesota were the only swing states that swung blue, nowhere near enough to secure a win for Hillary Clinton. Trump won Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida, Ohio, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, and Nevada, states in the Rust Belt, the Heartland, and the Deep South. (Excepting Nevada, the sparsely populated Western state whose biggest industries are gambling and gambling tourism.)

“Trump won Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida, Ohio, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, and Nevada, states in the Rust Belt, the Heartland, and the Deep South.”

This is not to reduce US politics to the corporate duopoly of Democrats and Republicans, only to point out that the Sinclair Broadcast Group fervently supported Trump and it has enormous influence in these states, especially their rural regions. (Far more influence than Russian bots or the $100,000 worth of Facebook ads said to have been purchased by Russians interfering in US elections.) Sinclair owns or operates 193 television stations nationwide; some compete in major metropolitan areas but far more are in rural regions. In California, Sinclair operates primarily in the sparsely populated central, eastern, and especially northeastern rural counties, not in Los Angeles County or the San Francisco Bay Area.

Countering the duopoly narrative

In many urban areas, Pacifica and its affiliates offer the only counter to the Republican/Democratic duopoly narratives, although the Democratic Party narrative commonly prevails, as it does at Pacifica’s flagship station KPFA Radio-Berkeley. But even KPFA gives more voice to the Bernie wing of the party, not the Clinton wing. 

Pacifica doesn’t challenge the Democrats’ commitment to war, austerity, and globalization as much as some of us might like, but with significant exceptions. One is Flashpoints, an hour-long, frontline investigative news magazine that airs every weekday at 5 pm in Berkeley. Another is Hard Knock Radio, a hip-hop culture and politics show that airs every weekday at 4 pm in Berkeley. A third is the weekly Project Censored Show, which airs on Friday afternoons between 1 and 2 pm in Berkeley. 

“Pacifica Audioport is a lifeline to many small stations and their communities.” 

Many stations throughout the Pacifica Radio Network air Flashpoints and Hard Knock Radio, and more than 40 stations from New York to Hawaii air Project Censored. Most affiliate stations air Democracy Now, and many air Counterspin, Making Contact, Letters and Politics, and other shows produced in and outside Pacifica. The Pacifica Audioport is the website where they can download programming produced at other stations, and it’s a lifeline to many small stations and their communities. 

Smaller stations are nevertheless faced with the challenge of producing local news, which grassroots radio audiences have over and over said they’re hungry for, on their shoestring budgets. One of the most outstanding success stories is the newscast at KRFP-Radio Free Moscow, Idaho, where Station Manager, Program Director, and News Director Leigh Robartes is the only paid employee. At the 2018 Grassroots Radio Conference (GRC) in Portland, Oregon, Robartes led a breakout session—Launching Local News Bureaus—that is now archived with other Portland-2018 archiveson the Grassroots Radio Conference website. Robartes has even offered to give programmers from other affiliate stations hands-on instruction and experience in producing local news and integrating it with the Pacifica national and international news that they can download on the Audioport website. (If they can get to Moscow, Idaho, and find a place to stay for a few days or more.)

“One of the most outstanding success stories is the newscast at KRFP-Radio Free Moscow, Idaho.”

KRFP-Radio Free Moscow is a great station. I often listen to its local newscast from distant Berkeley, California. I love its reports about the battles for endangered species throughout the Northwest, and I especially enjoyed hearing about the discovery of a large worm that one KRFP listener came across on a walk in the pouring rain. He noted that it was unusually large, a worm he’d never seen, so he took it to environmental scientists at the University of Idaho-Moscow. They were astounded and excited that this domestic worm they’d thought extinct was still extant and making a comeback. 

Idaho has two senators, Republicans Mike Crapo and Jim Risch, and only one representative in the House, Republican Russ Fulcher. In 2016, Donald Trump won Idaho by 59.2 percent. However, if you listen to KRFP-Moscow, you’ll know that there’s a highly conscious, anti-racist, well-organized, left culture there, and it’s holding its own against the right-wing religious cult trying to take over the town. According to Leigh Robartes, KRFP is the only Moscow media outlet that the cult hasn’t been able to compromise.

“WCIW-LP in Immokalee, Florida, was created specifically to serve the Coalition of Immokalee Workers.”

Every time I browse through websites of Pacifica affiliate stations, I come across radical radio standouts, most recently WCIW-LP in Immokalee, Florida, an unincorporated area and census-designated place (CDP) in Collier County, Florida. Immokalee’s racial makeup is 71% Hispanic and 18% Black, and the station was created specifically to serve the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), a collective of migrant workers from Mexico, Guatemala, and Haiti. Representing over 2500 members, the CIW fights for fair wages, better housing, stronger laws and enforcement of laws protecting workers' rights, and “an end to indentured servitude in the fields."

Ursula Ruedenberg, Coordinator of the Pacifica Affiliates Program—the 200 affiliate stations—says that the Pacifica brand and Audioport are what hold it together. We need to resist the Pacifica secessionists and keep it alive.

Ann Garrison is an independent journalist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2014, she received the Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza Democracy and Peace Prizefor her reporting on conflict in the African Great Lakes region. She can be reached at ann@anngarrison.com.

COMMENTS?

Please join the conversation on Black Agenda Report's Facebook page at http://facebook.com/blackagendareport

Or, you can comment by emailing us at comments@blackagendareportcom

Media

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Black Agenda Radio
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio November 15, 2024
    15 Nov 2024
    This week, we discuss the UK, where a Black woman was chosen to lead the conservative party. First, we cover the U.S. presidential election and the angry reactions within the Black community.
  • TikTokers bragging about going to starbucks
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Voters Angry After Another Trump Victory
    15 Nov 2024
    Afeni provides analysis on the results of the presidential election and the reaction of many angry Black voters who have expressed reactionary and racist commentary in the wake of these results.
  • Kemi Badenoch
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Woman Chosen to Lead UK Conservative Party
    15 Nov 2024
    Roger McKenzie joins us to discuss Kemi Badenoch, a member of parliament in the UK, who was recently chosen to lead the Tories, the conservative party.
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Liberal Arrogance and Hatred on Display After Trump Victory
    13 Nov 2024
    While Donald Trump is frequently called a fascist and is even compared to Adolph Hitler, some angry democrats are engaging in their own racist and eliminationist rhetoric in the wake of his impending…
  • The Editors, Black Agenda Review
    ESSAY: The Peril of Mispronouncing “Parsley,” Sorayda Peguero Isaac, 2021
    13 Nov 2024
    Dominican author Sorayda Peguero Isaac on the persistence of anti-Haitianism.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us